lfhoward wrote:I may have missed it above, but there is another advantage to insulating too: peace and quiet. Uninsulated trailers amplify the sound of rain, and you can hear the neighbors a whole lot more easily when you are ready to go to sleep. I am glad I have insulation, even in the summer.
lfhoward wrote:I may have missed it above, but there is another advantage to insulating too: peace and quiet. Uninsulated trailers amplify the sound of rain, and you can hear the neighbors a whole lot more easily when you are ready to go to sleep. I am glad I have insulation, even in the summer.
lfhoward wrote:I may have missed it above, but there is another advantage to insulating too: peace and quiet. Uninsulated trailers amplify the sound of rain, and you can hear the neighbors a whole lot more easily when you are ready to go to sleep. I am glad I have insulation, even in the summer.
My thought/question/concern is does ramping up to say an R15 really do anything greater than say an R5 on the walls when 15 to 20% of your wall space is hovering around an R1 at best?
tony.latham wrote:My thought/question/concern is does ramping up to say an R15 really do anything greater than say an R5 on the walls when 15 to 20% of your wall space is hovering around an R1 at best?
I firmly believe that 3/4" of foam in a sandwich wall is fine.
Tony
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